Saturday, February 11, 2012

I did not know Fatima Meer

smaller text tool iconmedium text tool iconlarger text tool icon

Fatima MeerA tribute by the Accidental Academic, Azad Essa

A number of activists, writers, politicians, morons and other opportunists will be writing long-drawn tributes to Fatima Meer in the coming weeks. Some of the personalised tributes will be less bearable than others: “I met Fatima at the mall” to the more ridiculous: “She introduced me to my abusive ex-husband” or “I tried to kill her once”.

Describing her remarkable journey as one of the most incredible stalwarts of the anti-apartheid and anti-poor people struggle inadvertently will become as important as unashamedly recognising the opportunity to raise your own market value as the well-connected, blessed storyteller: an often nauseating and willfully pathetic attempt at pontification to immortality by association.

And now that I discuss Fatima Meer here, I become one of the losers I have just described.

Except, I am not going to tell you how she taught me hopscotch, how she inspired me to care about others or how her memory gives me goose bumps.

I did not know Fatima Meer.

I have not read any of her 25 books. I was not even born when she lectured. And I probably was playing cricket when she patrolled Chatsworth as she attempted to help the
poor natives.

Fatima Meer was to me like that elusive relative is to you – the one your father, cousin or drunk neighbour told you about one night when you sat smoking pot on your roof; who apparently lived an incredibly rich life, whom you never got to know and worse, never ever were able to visit.

We all have one of those.

“You know, this man went against his family’s wishes… He moved to the Transkei in the ‘60s, building the first school for kids with special needs. He was a medical doctor but education was his thing. You know, he loved people so much that when he was detained for a week in a special holding cell for being a ‘K-lover’, he met Madiba in passing and he was so inspired, he joined the arms struggle, functioning more as a doctor...” says your narrator, as he exhales the good stuff.

“You should go talk to him one day, he lives just down the road… fascinating man… What he will tell you, you won’t find in any history book.”

But, of course, you never did grab the opportunity.

Just like I never did.

Every day I would drive past Burnwood Road in Durban, the very road that swung alongside the Kennedy Road dump, where she lived in a modest house.

And almost every week as I would drive by in a characteristic scurry, I would look at the bend that led to her home and Makro, and I would remind myself: “I have to go see her soon!”

But I never did. Sometimes I actually went on to Makro.

And now she is gone. Her house marked as a possible National Heritage Site.

All the while I sit here, sheepishly writing a half-baked story of gutted regret, when I could have been “out there” lapping up lessons she so willingly passed on to those who cared.

But I am quite sure I am not the only one headed for a reality check.

Today, if you walked into the Sociology department at the University of KwaZulu-Natal (formerly known as the University of Natal), you will struggle for clues that would point to a time when an emphatic, important and moving character shook the corridors and pummelled her way to becoming the first black female professor at the white university.

To those who knew her, Fatima Meer was tough as she was compassionate, and insistent as she was giving. Crucially, she was able to circumvent rhetoric uniquely in pulverising her discipline beyond the lecture halls.

But there is no honour board, no photo frame, no library; no Chair of Sociology that even links the university to this great servant.

As a pioneering public sociologist, who literally linked the theoretical mumbo jumbo with the travails of the outside world with compassion, determination and fervour to make a difference, it is morally repugnant that returning sociology students will not even know that their seat once was warmed by the insistent foot soldier who lived what they probably were not being taught.

Something that most of our curriculums are lacking.

It does not take long for the maggots to set in, but it took five days before the university’s Corporate Relations mustered up a press release of her demise.

You can bet there will be a move to name a “Fatima Meer” something or other, now that she is gone.

Perhaps a library, a book counter or even a toaster.

The question now: Is it too late to commemorate her legacy substantially, or will she simply be deified for lesser ends?


Newer news items:
Older news items:

Azad Essa is a freelance journalist and lecturer at the University of KwaZulu-Natal. In his spare time, he scolds politicians.

Comments (0)
Write comment
Your Contact Details:
Comment:
Security
Please input the anti-spam code that you can read in the image.
Move
-

Recent Articles

Top Headline

Danger of global conflict

Danger of global conflict

Possibility of another Gulf war on the rise With the amassing of naval firepower, armaments and troops – American troops are expected to reach the 100 000 mark by March – in the Persian Gulf region, the spectre of what is called a fourth Gulf war, is starting to take on an air of inevitability. If it does come to pass, few countries,...

Read More...

Final word

Adonis and his tattoos
The attractive young female presenter of a SABC magazine programme recently persuaded an Adonis of a rugby player to strip off his shirt so that she could see his tattoos - this had me wondering about a few things.

Read More...

Worth a read

Worth a read

Final word – the book In our weekly column, Final word, we explore the origin of words and expressions, often exposing an underlying typical South African humour that transcends racial and language divides in a shared heritage. A selection of 50 of these columns is now available in a book.

Read More...

Rugby watch

Rugby watch

Old traps loom for coach Heyneke Meyer The more things change, the more they stay the same and history is set to repeat itself in 2012 if Heyneke Meyer, the new Springbok rugby coach, does not learn from the disasters of the 1999 and 2011 Rugby World Cups. Who he will appoint as his Springbok captain might just set the tone for,...

Read More...

Out of Africa

Out of Africa

The restless ghost of Libya The ghost of Libya has come back to haunt the US and her Western allies. An attempt to have the UN Security Council pass a resolution that would back an Arab League plan to resolve the crisis in Syria, failed when Russia and China vetoed it. At the same time North African stability is also...

Read More...
Leadership magazine is South Africa's number one award winning business magazine having won the Tabbie Gold Award for Best Single Issue in the world (TABPI), PICA Awards for Magazine of the Year, Best Publication, Editor of the Year, Cover Design

The Leadership Bullentin


Archive